Nordhausen Concentration Camp/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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==Parent topics== | ==Parent topics== | ||
{{ | {{rpl|Nazi concentration camps}} | ||
{{ | {{rpl|Buchenwald Concentration Camp||**}} | ||
==Subtopics== | ==Subtopics== | ||
{{rpl|V-2}} | |||
== Other Nazi concentration camps documented in this wiki == | |||
{{rpl|Buchenwald Concentration Camp}} | |||
{{rpl|Dachau Concentration Camp}} | |||
{{rpl|Flossenburg Concentration Camp}} | |||
{{rpl|Mauthausen Concentration Camp}} | |||
{{rpl|Mauthausen-Gusen Concentration Camp}} | |||
{{rpl|Nordhausen Concentration Camp}} | |||
==Articles related by keyphrases (Bot populated)== | |||
{{r|Concentration camp}} | |||
{{r|I.G. Farben}} | |||
{{r|V-2}} | {{r|V-2}} | ||
{{r|United States intelligence community oversight}} | |||
Latest revision as of 17:00, 26 September 2024
- See also changes related to Nordhausen Concentration Camp, or pages that link to Nordhausen Concentration Camp or to this page or whose text contains "Nordhausen Concentration Camp".
Parent topics
- Nazi concentration camps: The system of concentration and extermination camps of Nazi Germany, with a mixed chain of command but principally under the WVHA economic administration, under Oswald Pohl, of the SS; as part of Holocaust, they killed millions of Jews, but also Soviet prisoners of war and others seen as undersirable by the Nazis; they complemented killing activities in the field, such as Einsatzgruppen [e]
- Buchenwald Concentration Camp: A Nazi death camp, notorious for medical experiments, in which at least 56,000 inmates died (out of 250,000 prisoners in all), located near the German city of Weimar. [e]
Subtopics
- V-2: World's first operational ballistic missile, developed by Nazi Germany: (Vergeltungswaffe 2). [e]
Other Nazi concentration camps documented in this wiki
- Buchenwald Concentration Camp: A Nazi death camp, notorious for medical experiments, in which at least 56,000 inmates died (out of 250,000 prisoners in all), located near the German city of Weimar. [e]
- Dachau Concentration Camp: A Nazi death camp in which around 40,000 inmates died (out of 200,000 prisoners in all), located about 10 miles northeast of Munich. [e]
- Flossenburg Concentration Camp: A Nazi slave labor camp in which around 30,000 inmates died from malnutrition, overwork, or executions (out of 89,964-100,000 prisoners in all), located in east central Germany on the border with Czechoslovakia. [e]
- Mauthausen Concentration Camp: Add brief definition or description
- Mauthausen-Gusen Concentration Camp: A large system of concentration camps and subcamps in Austria; Mauthausen was the original camp; many deliberately killed but principally by starvation, overwork, beatings, and hurling into the rock quarry run by the Deutsche Erd- und Steinwerke GmbH [e]
- Nordhausen Concentration Camp: A Nazi slave labor camp in which around 20,000 inmates died from malnutrition, overwork, or executions (out of 60,000 prisoners in all), located in the German city of Nordhausen. [e]
- Concentration camp [r]: A camp where civilians, enemy aliens, political prisoners, and sometimes unwanted ethnic groups are detained and confined under extremely harsh conditions (including the murder of the detainees as during the Holocaust in Nazi Germany). [e]
- I.G. Farben [r]: Originally a 1925 merger of German dye companies, a major WWII industrial conglomerate that used slave labor and was deeply tied to Nazi war planning [e]
- V-2 [r]: World's first operational ballistic missile, developed by Nazi Germany: (Vergeltungswaffe 2). [e]
- United States intelligence community oversight [r]: High-level U.S. government oversight, in the White House and Congress, of sensitive covert action and clandestine operations by the United States intelligence community and military special operations forces [e]